Michael Krebber, Puberty in Teaching
Solo Exhibition with special guest Stefan Hoderlein
21.06. - 28.09.08
Michael Krebber, Pubertät in der Lehre/Puberty in Teaching, 2008
Installationsansicht
Foto: Simon Vogel
The title of the exhibition, Puberty in Teaching, is at first sight paradoxical, since the two concepts, teaching and puberty, seem contradictory. One thinks both of Michael Krebber’s idea of Puberty in Painting and also of his professorship at the
Michael Krebber, Pubertät in der Lehre/Puberty in Teaching,2008
Installationsansicht
Foto: Simon Vogel
Michael Krebber (born 1954) is one of the most influential artists working in
Michael Krebber was always viewed as a painter with a conceptual orientation. This label is applied to an oeuvre in which he has for more than 25 years been testing out the frontiers and possibilities of painting, without his work itself always appearing in the form of painting. However attributing him to conceptualism diverts attention from the purely formal qualities of his work. The question arises of whether Krebber uses this type of attribution simply as a trick for his work at certain times, in which grasping or outreach and simultaneous rejection, false bottoms, dead ends and illusions are everywhere immanent.
Michael Krebber,Pubertät in der Lehre/Puberty in Teaching, 2008
Ausstellungsansicht
Foto: Simon Vogel
‘But the more recent term Formalism too, once considered by all and sundry to be a form of smoothly functioning double-agency, should be included in any debate on widening the approach to reception and production.
Exclusively sculptures are on show in the exhibition puberty in sculpture; pieces of sawn-up surfboards as wall sculptures, and on the lawn in front of the Kunstverein an open air sculpture inspired by the HOLLYWOOD sign, displaying the words Herr Krebber in large letters. All these ideas are either from bad jokes, or are just plain uninteresting, or are stolen or copied from somewhere else. Surfboards, carved in slices like tuna-fish and hung on the wall like a Donald Judd sculpture, and the words Herr Krebber erected like a sign to attract buyers for a plot of land.
These sculptures confront us with the weight and materiality which are required by object-based practice, requirements which can be avoided in teaching, philosophy and in other forms of mediation.
Herr Krebber is an adaptation of Paul Valéry’s Monsieur Teste, who isnt capable of identifying with any one role, whatever it might be, and who “is aware of the possibility that forgery too can be forged”. In this exhibition and in the book which accompanies it, the answer to the question of how MonsieurTeste would deal with these sculptures is put on hold.’ (Michael Krebber)
Michael Krebber,Fanatic, Ausstellungsansicht
Pubertätin der Lehre/Puberty in Teaching, 2008
Foto: Simon Vogel
The catalogue too forms a central part of the exhibition, with texts by Alex Foges, John Kelsey and Tanja Widmann, and a series of more than eighty reproductions of
With the exhibition a special edition will be published:
We wish to thank the Minister-President of the